Ukraine on track to withdraw from Ottawa anti-personnel mines treaty, lawmaker says

Ukraine on track to withdraw from Ottawa anti-personnel mines treaty, lawmaker says
Explosive equipment are seen on the ground as Ukrainian bomb squad team from the 93rd Brigade carries out mine and shell detonation work in Donetsk region, Ukraine. (AFP)
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Updated 29 June 2025

Ukraine on track to withdraw from Ottawa anti-personnel mines treaty, lawmaker says

Ukraine on track to withdraw from Ottawa anti-personnel mines treaty, lawmaker says

KYIV: Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has signed a decree on the country’s withdrawal from the Ottawa Convention, which bans the production and use of anti-personnel mines, a senior Ukrainian lawmaker said on Sunday.
Ukraine ratified the convention in 2005 and a parliamentary decision is needed to withdraw from the treaty.
The document is not yet available on the website of the president’s office.
“This is a step that the reality of war has long demanded. Russia is not a party to this Convention and is massively using mines against our military and civilians,” Roman Kostenko, secretary of the Ukraine parliament’s committee on national security, defense and intelligence, said on his Facebook page.
“We cannot remain tied down in an environment where the enemy has no restrictions,” he added, saying that the legislative decision must definitively restore Ukraine’s right to effectively defend its territory.
Russia has intensified its offensive operations in Ukraine in recent months, using significant superiority in manpower.
Kostenko did not say when the issue would be debated in parliament.


FBI Director Kash Patel clashes with skeptical Democrats at contentious Senate hearing

FBI Director Kash Patel clashes with skeptical Democrats at contentious Senate hearing
Updated 5 sec ago

FBI Director Kash Patel clashes with skeptical Democrats at contentious Senate hearing

FBI Director Kash Patel clashes with skeptical Democrats at contentious Senate hearing

WASHINGTON: FBI Director Kash Patel clashed with skeptical Democrats at a contentious Senate oversight hearing Tuesday, defending his record amid criticism that he has politicized the nation’s premier federal law enforcement agency and pursued retribution against perceived adversaries of President Donald Trump.
The appearance Tuesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee represented the first oversight hearing of Patel’s young but tumultuous tenure and provided a high-stakes platform for him to try to demonstrate that he is the right person for the job at a time of internal upheaval and mounting concerns about political violence inside the United States, a threat laid bare by last week’s killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk at a college campus in Utah.
The hearing broke along starkly partisan lines, with Republicans rallying support for Patel even as Democrats said he had debased the integrity of the nation’s premier federal law enforcement agency. Patel, for his part, accused Democrats of grandstanding for cameras and looking to score political points in a series of testy shouting matches that punctuated more sedate testimony about the criminal and national security threats facing the US
“You are the biggest fraud to ever sit in the United States Senate, you are a disgrace to this institution and you are an utter coward,” Patel told Democratic Sen. Adam Schiff of California, raising his voice during one particularly combative interaction.
“You can make an Internet troll the FBI director, but he will always be an Internet troll,” Schiff shot back as Patel continued to shout over him.
Patel sought to keep the focus on what he said was a series of accomplishments in fighting violent crime, protecting children from abuse and disrupting the flow of fentanyl. He similarly touted the FBI’s work in arresting within 33 hours the man suspected in Kirk’s assassination, but also faced questions over confusion he caused soon after the killing when he posted on social media that “the subject” was in custody.
That person was later released after investigators determined he had no connection. Patel said he had been trying to be transparent with the public and didn’t consider the post a mistake, but acknowledged he could have been clearer.
“Could I have been more careful in my verbiage and included ‘a’ subject instead of subject? Sure,” Patel said.
Questions about FBI firings
Democrats repeatedly tried to steer the hearing back to the turmoil inside the FBI, including a purge of experienced agents and supervisors that they said was a troubling about-face from his confirmation hearing pledge in January that he would not look “backwards” or seek retaliation as director.
“I’m not going to mince words: You lied to us,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat.
Patel angrily disputed that suggestion, and said that though he could not discuss the specifics of those firings due to the litigation, “Anyone that is terminated at the FBI, as I’ve said before, is done so because they failed to meet the standards and uphold their loyalty and oath to the Constitution.”
Five agents and top-level executives were known to have been summarily fired last month in a wave of ousters that current and former officials say has contributed to declining morale.
One of those, Steve Jensen, helped oversee investigations into the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the US Capitol. Another, Brian Driscoll, served as acting director in the early days of the Trump administration and resisted Justice Department demands to supply the names of agents who investigated Jan. 6. A third, Chris Meyer, was incorrectly rumored on social media to have participated in the investigation into Trump’s retention of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida.
A lawsuit filed last week by three of the fired agents alleged that Patel understood that the firings were “likely illegal” but had to carry them out because he was ordered to do so from the White House. Patel on Tuesday denied taking orders from the White House on whom to fire.
“I believe that you’re failing as a leader and that your failure does have serious implications for the safety and security of Americans and our families,” said Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey. “We’re more vulnerable to domestic and foreign attack because of your failures of leadership.”
The accusation prompted an angry response from Patel, who called it a “rant of false information” and rattled off what he said was a series of successes under his watch as the FBI has elevated its focus on illegal immigration, street crime, drugs and human trafficking.
“If the FBI under my seven-month leadership were failing this administration and this country, why do we have 23,000 violent felons arrested this year alone?” Patel asked. “Why is it that we have seized 6,000 weapons? Why have we found 1,500 child predators and arrested them?”
Patel had a similarly tense exchange with Sen. Dick Durbin, the top Democrat on the committee, after Durbin challenged him on an unsubstantiated theory advanced by Deputy Director Dan Bongino that the placement of pipe bombs in Washington ahead of the Capitol riot was an inside job.
“I find it disgusting that everyone and anyone would jettison our 31 years of combined experience that is now at the helm of the FBI, delivering historic results at a historic speed for the American people,” Patel said.
Retaliation denied
Republicans eagerly came to Patel’s defense, with Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, the committee chairman, praising the director for having “begun the important work of returning the FBI to its law enforcement mission.”
“It’s well understood that your predecessor left you an FBI infected with politics,” Grassley stated.
The hearing unfolded against the backdrop of the Kirk killing and on the same day that the suspected shooter, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, was charged in Utah with aggravated murder. Patel said the FBI was continuing to investigate the suspect, who authorities said ascribed to a ” leftist ideology, ” with investigators “running out every lead related to any allegation of broader violence.”
The FBI director was also challenged on whether he was pursuing retaliation against perceived Trump foes, including through a fresh inquiry the bureau has undertaken related to the long-concluded FBI investigation into potential ties between Russia and Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign.
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse estimated that Patel had already taken some sort of adverse action against 20 of the 60 or so people who were singled out in what the Rhode Island Democrat described as an “enemies list” in a 2023 book Patel authored called “Government Gangsters: The Deep State, the Truth and the Battle for Our Democracy.”
The Justice Department, for instance, appeared to confirm in an unusual statement in July that it was investigating former FBI Director James Comey and former CIA Director John Brennan, both pivotal players in the Russia saga.
“That is an entirely inaccurate presupposition,” Patel said. “I do not have an enemies list.”


Trump administration sued over actions against University of California

Trump administration sued over actions against University of California
Updated 17 September 2025

Trump administration sued over actions against University of California

Trump administration sued over actions against University of California
  • Protesters, including some Jewish groups, have said the government is wrongly equating their criticism of Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories with antisemitism, and their advocacy for Palestinian rights with support for extremism

WASHINGTON: Labor unions, faculty and students in the University of California education system sued President Donald Trump’s administration on Tuesday over the freezing of federal funds and other actions that they say aim to stifle academic freedom.
The lawsuit, filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of California, seeks to forbid the government from using financial threats against the system that it said were harmful and unlawful. It also aims to restore funding already suspended.
“(The administration) has attempted to implement a playbook to threaten colleges and universities,” the coalition that filed the lawsuit said. It added that those threats were based on disdain for the institutions’ curriculum, expressive activity on campuses, and initiatives for diversity, equity and inclusion.
The University of California system and the White House had no immediate comment on the lawsuit.

HIGHLIGHTS

• Trump has targeted universities with threats of funding freezes

• Critics say Trump is using probes and funding threats to strong-arm universities

• University of California says it faces ‘one of the gravest threats’ in its history

The government has launched probes into universities’ handling of alleged antisemitism during student protests against Israel’s assault on Gaza, and has frozen funds over that and other issues, including climate initiatives and DEI programs.
Civil rights advocates say the Trump administration is attempting to make universities more aligned with his political agenda, while critics also see such attempts as threatening free speech and academic freedom.
The University of California operates one of the largest higher-education systems in the country, with 10 main campuses and nearly 300,000 students, as well as 265,000 faculty and staff.
The Trump administration had proposed to settle its probe into the University of California, Los Angeles — part of the university system — through a $1 billion payment from the institution. Democratic California Governor Gavin Newsom called that an extortion attempt.
UCLA said in August the government froze $584 million in funding before a judge ordered the Trump administration to restore some of that money. The University of California, Berkeley, another campus in the system, said on Friday it provided information on 160 faculty members and students to the government as part of an investigation.
University of California President James Milliken said on Monday the institution was facing one of the gravest threats in its history due to the federal government’s actions, noting that it receives more than $17 billion each year in federal support.
The Trump administration has faced some legal roadblocks in its funding freeze attempts. A federal judge ruled earlier this month that it had unlawfully terminated more than $2 billion in grants for Harvard University.
The government alleges universities allowed antisemitism during campus protests. Protesters, including some Jewish groups, have said the government is wrongly equating their criticism of Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories with antisemitism, and their advocacy for Palestinian rights with support for extremism.
Human rights advocates have noted a rise in antisemitism, anti-Arab bias and Islamophobia due to conflict in the Middle East, although the Trump administration has not announced probes into Islamophobia.
The administration has settled its investigations with Columbia and Brown universities. 

 


Israel’s new ground offensive in Gaza City ‘horrific,’ Canada says

Israel’s new ground offensive in Gaza City ‘horrific,’ Canada says
Updated 17 September 2025

Israel’s new ground offensive in Gaza City ‘horrific,’ Canada says

Israel’s new ground offensive in Gaza City ‘horrific,’ Canada says
  • “The Government of Israel must adhere to international law”

OTTAWA: Canada’s foreign ministry on Tuesday called Israel’s new ground offensive in Gaza City “horrific.”
“It worsens the humanitarian crisis and jeopardizes the release of the hostages,” the foreign ministry said in a post on X. “The Government of Israel must adhere to international law.” 

 


US tech deals alongside Trump’s UK visit

US tech deals alongside Trump’s UK visit
Updated 17 September 2025

US tech deals alongside Trump’s UK visit

US tech deals alongside Trump’s UK visit

LONDON: President Donald Trump’s state visit to the UK has already delivered pledges from US tech giants to invest a combined $42 billion to help drive Britain’s AI sector.
The UK and US governments meanwhile agreed co-operation over nuclear and space technology as part of a “Tech Prosperity Deal.”
Below is a list of the main deals, led by Microsoft, outlined in a joint statement issued by the UK government and companies.
Microsoft
The company’s “largest ever commitment to the UK” comprises a $30-billion investment over four years, half of which will be spent on cloud computing and artificial intelligence infrastructure.
It includes plans to build Britain’s largest supercomputer.
“We’re committed to creating new opportunity for people and businesses on both sides of the Atlantic, and to ensuring America remains a trusted and reliable tech partner for the United Kingdom,” said Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella.
“That is why we are doubling down on our investment in the UK.”
Google
The search engine giant plans UK investment of £5 billion ($6.8 billion) over the next two years to power its AI drive, help “fortify cybersecurity” and create 8,250 jobs annually.
Nvidia, Stargate UK
British firm Nscale has partnered with Chat-GPT maker OpenAI and chip giant Nvidia to establish a UK version of Stargate — a large-scale AI infrastructure initiative.
The government said the project is aimed at “developing a platform designed to deploy OpenAI’s technology on sovereign infrastructure in the UK.”
Working alongside UK firms, Nvidia pledged to deploy a total 120,000 advanced GPU chips across the country, representing its biggest ever rollout in Europe.
Finance firms
Bank of America, BlackRock, Citi Group, PayPal and S&P Global are together investing around £1.75 billion to grow their UK operations.
Nuclear
Britain and the United States plan to speed up development of new nuclear power projects.
“This golden age of nuclear is central to the government’s mission to build more clean homegrown power to ensure energy security,” the UK government said.
Government partnerships
The two countries plan to “drive AI-powered health care solutions in areas such as precision medicine and chronic disease.”
The UK and US also plan to partner over “revolutionary quantum computers and speed up the deployment of this technology across areas like health care, defense and finance.”
NASA and the UK Space Agency intend to develop AI models to support science and exploration missions.


Social media has us in its grip and won’t let go. The Charlie Kirk killing is a case study

Social media has us in its grip and won’t let go. The Charlie Kirk killing is a case study
Updated 17 September 2025

Social media has us in its grip and won’t let go. The Charlie Kirk killing is a case study

Social media has us in its grip and won’t let go. The Charlie Kirk killing is a case study
  • Divisive content and the proliferation of the video of Kirk’s death may not have been the goal but are the direct result of decisions made to maximize profits and cut back on content moderation, says social media expert

Charlie Kirk’s mastery of social media was key to his rise as an influence in conservative politics. So the extent to which his death and its aftermath have played out on those forums shouldn’t come as a surprise.
In a microcosm of life today, social media is where Americans have gone to process last week’s killing in Utah and is the chief tool his supporters are using to police those they feel aren’t offering proper respect. Investigators are probing the time the man accused of killing Kirk, Tyler Robinson, spent in the “dark corners of the Internet” — anti-social media, if you will — leading up to when he allegedly pulled the trigger.
On the other side of the world, as the Kirk story preoccupied Americans, Nepal reeled from a spasm of violence that erupted when the government tried to ban social media platforms.
All of this is forcing a closer look at the technologies that have changed our lives, how they control what we see and understand through algorithms, and the way all the time we spend on them affects our view of the world.
Cox emerges as powerful spokesman against social media
Utah’s governor, Republican Spencer Cox, believes “cancer” isn’t a strong enough word to describe social media. “The most powerful companies in the history of the world have figured out how to hack our brains, get us addicted to outrage ... and get us to hate each other,” Cox said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawaii, urged Americans via social media to “pull yourself together, read a book, get some exercise, have a whiskey, walk the dog or make some pasta or go fishing or just do anything other than let this algo pickle your brain and ruin your soul.”
Chilling videos of Kirk’s Sept. 10 assassination immediately overwhelmed sites like X, TikTok and YouTube, and companies are still working to contain their spread. Confrontational material and conspiracy theories are pushed into social media feeds because they do precisely what they’re designed to do — keep people on the platforms for longer periods of time.
“I do think we’re in a moment here,” said Laura Edelson, a Northeastern University professor and expert on social media algorithms. “Our country is being digitally mediated. Where we interact with other people, how we interact with broader society, that is more and more happening over feed algorithms. This is the most recent in a long line of ways that society has been changed by media technology.”
Divisive content and the proliferation of the video of Kirk’s death may not have been the goal but are the direct result of decisions made to maximize profits and cut back on content moderation, Edelson said.
“I don’t think there are people twirling their mustaches saying how great it is that we’ve divided society, except the Russian troll farms and, more and more, the Chinese troll farms,” she said.
X owner Elon Musk posted on his site this past week that while discourse can become negative, “it’s still good there is a discussion going.” President Donald Trump, who created his own social platform, was asked about Cox’s comments Tuesday before leaving for a trip to the United Kingdom. He said that while social media can create “deep, dark holes that are cancerous,” it wasn’t all bad.
“Well, it’s not a cancer in all respects,” he told reporters. “In some respects, it is great.”
Conservative media star Ben Shapiro, who considered Kirk a friend, admired how Kirk was willing to go to different places and talk to people who disagreed with him, a practice all too rare in the social media era.
“How social media works is a disaster area, fully a disaster area,” Shapiro said in an interview with Bari Weiss on a Free Press podcast. “There’s no question it’s making the world a worse place — and that’s not a call for censorship.”
How people act on social media is a bipartisan problem, said Shapiro. The most pervasive one is people who use the third-person plural — “they” are doing something to “us,” he said. That’s been the case when many people discuss Kirk’s death, although the shooter’s motives haven’t become clear and there’s no evidence his actions are anything other than his own.
Collecting inflammatory posts from both sides
The liberal MeidasTouch media company has collected inflammatory social posts by conservatives, particularly those who suggest they’re at “war.” Meanwhile, several conservatives have combed social media for posts they consider negative toward Kirk, in some cases seeking to get people fired. The Libs of TikTok site urged that a Washington state school district be defunded because it refused to lower flags to half staff.
GOP Rep. Randy Fine of Florida asked people to point out negative Kirk posts from anyone who works in government, at a place that receives public funding or is licensed by government — a teacher or lawyer, for instance. “These monsters want a fight?” he wrote on X. “Congratulations, they got one.”
A Washington Post columnist, Karen Attiah, wrote Monday that she was fired for a series of Bluesky posts that expressed little sympathy for Kirk. But she wrote on Substack that “not performing over-the-top grief for white men who espouse violence was not the same as endorsing violence against them.” A Post spokeswoman declined to comment.
So much of what people use to talk about politics — algorithmically driven social media sites and cable television — is designed to pull Americans apart, said James Talarico, a Democratic state lawmaker in Texas who recently announced a bid for the US Senate. “We’ve got to find our way back to each other because that’s the only way we can continue this American experiment,” he said on MSNBC.
Among the most persistent examples of those divisions are the lies and misinformation about elections that have spread for years through online social channels. They have undermined faith in one of the country’s bedrock institutions and contributed to the rage that led Trump supporters to violently storm the US Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Whether meaningful change is possible remains an open question. Nepal’s unrest illustrated the dangers of government involvement: Social media sites were shut down and users protested, suggesting it had been a way to stop criticism of government. Police opened fire at one demonstration, killing 19 people.
Persuading social media sites to change their algorithms is also an uphill battle. They live off attention and people spending as much time as possible on them. Unless advertisers flee for fear of being associated with violent posts, there’s little incentive for them to change, said Jasmine Enberg, a social media analyst at Emarketer.
Young people in particular are becoming aware of the dangers of spending too much time on social media, she said.
But turn their phones off? “The reality of the situation,” Enberg said, “is that there’s a limit to how much they can limit their behavior.”